This invention relates to an image display device constructed from silent gas discharge lamps. Silent gas discharge lamps are known per se, and by definition have a dielectric layer between at least the anode(s) and the discharge medium, although in the bipolar case all the electrodes have dielectric barriers.
Silent discharge lamps are known per se. They are advantageous for various applications, including in particular the backlighting of displays in flat screens, etc. For this field of application, construction as a so-called flat panel lamp is known, in which the lamp consists essentially of two plane-parallel plates that can be connected via a frame and enclose the discharge medium between them. One of the two plates is in this case used as the light emission surface of the flat panel lamp.
These silent gas discharge lamps are preferably operated with a pulsed operating method, with which a particularly high efficiency can be achieved in the generation of light (UV light or, preferably, visible light when luminescent materials are used). The specifics of this operating method are also prior art and are familiar to the person skilled in the art, so that details need not be entered into here.
It is furthermore known to use, in a silent gas discharge lamp, an electrode arrangement divided into several groups, wherein the groups can be operated separately from one another. In this way, for example, it is possible to illuminate different areas of an instrument arrangement independently of one another, and to switch this illumination on and off for the different areas, with only one lamp being used in total. In this case, the various areas of the instrument illumination may be colored differently, i.e. luminescent materials or luminescent mixtures having different colors may be used. Reference is made to EP 97 122 799.6.
It is a technical object of the present invention to provide a novel application possibility for silent discharge lamps.
To that end, the invention relates to an image display device comprising a plurality of gas discharge lamps, respectively having a discharge vessel filled with a gas fill, at least two electrodes, a dielectric layer between at least one of the electrodes and the gas fill, and a luminescent layer, wherein the gas discharge lamps are arranged next to one another in a plane to form a surface, and the image display is colored and the gas discharge lamps can emit different colors.
Preferred embodiments are indicated in the dependent claims.
The basic idea of the invention involves not using the individual silent discharge lamp as a backlighting lamp for a display, as is conventionally done, but instead making an element of the actual image display from the discharge lamp itself. To that end, an image display device, i.e. a display, is to be constructed from a plurality of silent gas discharge lamps arranged next to one another in a plane and, by colored operation of the silent discharge lamps, it should be possible to produce not only monochrome image information, but rather a color image formed from at least two, preferably three, primary colors. In this case, on the one hand it is conceivable for the individual discharge lamps to form respective monochrome pixels and for a multicolor image display to be made possible overall by a set of differently colored pixels arranged next to one another.
However, the case in which the individual gas discharge lamp can already represent the color spectrum of the display and hence functions as a full color pixel (with two or three primary colors) is preferred. The spatial resolution of the display is then of the order of the dimensions of the individual discharge lamp, or better. Indeed, it is also possible for the individual discharge lamp to form not just one, but several full color pixels, if it is itself spatially subdivided and contains respective full color pixels in different elementary surfaces arranged next to one another. This is a question of separate operability of subregions of the discharge lamp and, with cost-effective manufacture of large-format silent discharge lamps, it may be more advantageous than a correspondingly larger number of smaller-format lamps.
With regard to the individual discharge lamp, reference is firstly made to a simultaneous parallel application by the same Applicant, entitled “Stille Entladungslampe mit steuerbarer Farbe” [silent discharge lamp with controllable color], the disclosure of which is hereby cited. In brief, said patent shows how, by subdividing the electrode set in the discharge lamp, it is possible to create separately operable electrode groups, which are respectively assigned to differently colored elementary luminescent surfaces. Therefore, by selective or incrementally simultaneous operation of the various electrode groups, it is possible to emit a color spectrum of the luminescent colors from the elementary luminescent surfaces and the color mixtures that can be produced therefrom. In this case, the elementary luminescent surfaces should be interleaved in such a way that essentially uniform light emission is obtained overall with each elementary luminescent surface, i.e. illumination of essentially the entire light emission surface of the pixel in question. This pixel may, however, correspond to a subregion of the overall light emission surface of the lamp, in which case the corresponding elementary luminescent surfaces and electrode groups only need to be interleaved within this subregion.
The two or more pixels, which are inside the same lamp in this case, naturally need to be operable independently of one another, in order to function overall as separate pixels so that, on the one hand, through the primary color allocation and, on the other hand, through the large number of pixels, a complex group structure can be obtained inside the lamp. Also, as explained in more detail in the cited parallel application, owing to the necessary dimming operation of the individual groups to produce continuous color mixtures, it may be expedient to provide electrode subgroups with different discharge gaps within each individual group, so that it is possible to operate with particularly small powers.
Overall, it is hence possible to construct a color display with individual gas discharge lamps by time-varying multicolored operation (of a lamp or a set of neighboring lamps). In another variant of the invention, the multicolor generation inside a single pixel may also take place according to a principle which has already been put forward in a prior, as yet unpublished patent application having the official file reference D 199 27 791.5 (associated PCT/DE 00/01823) with regard to the backlighting of an LCD display. According thereto, the gas discharge lamp can be operated in a sequentially timed way with successive colors, the frequency of the color generation being so high that the human eye actually perceives a corresponding color mixture. To that end, as explained in more detail in the cited application, several electrode groups, which are sequentially operated, may in turn be provided inside a gas discharge lamp, or a plurality of discharge lamps that are respectively assigned to the individual colors, and are to be operated sequentially overall, may be provided.
In the aforementioned application in the context of a large image display device having a plurality of such discharge lamps, the LCD display arranged in front (which is described in the cited application) is superfluous because the sequential operation is basically intended to produce only the chromaticity of an image pixel. This can be done just by controlling the power of the individual primary colors, without an additional contribution needing to be made by an LCD display or other brightness filter. Naturally, however, it is also possible to work with such a display, so that the spatial resolution can be greatly increased, although the costs rise significantly. In this context, the image display device according to the invention might hence consist of a parallel connection of individual LCD displays according to the cited application 199 27 791.5.
The invention will be explained in more detail below with the aid of exemplary embodiments that are represented in the figures. In the preceding description, as well as the description below, the disclosed features are to be taken both in the context of the device category and in the context of the method category.
The uniformity can be further enhanced by also interposing, in front of the discharge lamp, a diffuser element that is known per se for smoothing the light density distribution in display screen backlighting systems, for example a prism film or a matt sheet.
The separate operability of the cathodes 5 and 6 creates two electrode groups 4, 5 and 4, 6 (with common anodes), to which the discharge structures schematically indicated as respective triangles are assigned. In the figure, simultaneous operation of both electrode groups is hence assumed.
It is self-evident that the electrode strips 4, 5, 6 need to be insulated from one another at the intersection points and in the regions where they pass relatively close to one another. To that end, a corresponding safety distance (not pictorially represented in
It is self-evident that the squares that are respectively enclosed between the cathodes 5 and 6 and the anodes 4, and in which the individual discharge structures 8 are located, are arranged directly under the individual squares of the elementary luminescent surfaces 2 and 3 in the lamp. In this way, the electrode groups 4, 5 and 4, 6 are respectively assigned to one of the two elementary luminescent surfaces 2 and 3. Depending on the size of the individual squares, and as a function of the distance between the discharge structures 8 and the elementary luminescent surfaces (perpendicular to the plane of the drawing as shown in the figures), when one of the two electrode groups 4, 5 and 4, 6 is in operation, some degree of excitation of the other elementary luminescent surface not actually assigned to it will naturally also occur. This slightly impairs the purity of the primary colors when only one of the two electrode groups 4, 5 and 4, 6 is being operated, but it does not fundamentally change the basic principle of the representability of all color mixtures between the primary colors that can be represented.
The flat display screen wall 14 consists essentially of a large number of individual gas discharge lamps 15, which are mounted next to one another in a plane and are constructed according to
Alternatively, the image display device 12 in
The comment already made in the introduction to the description moreover applies, that by subdividing the individual lamps, it is also possible to achieve a higher spatial resolution of the graphical representation and the color representation than that which corresponds to the individual lamp size. This is essentially a question of economics, that is to say depending on whether a set of smaller lamps or a larger lamp that corresponds to the format of the full set, but is subdivided, is more cost-effective to manufacture.
An essential advantage of using silent discharge lamps for image display devices 12, as in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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100 63 931 | Dec 2000 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE01/04282 | 11/15/2001 | WO | 00 | 6/19/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO02/50807 | 6/27/2002 | WO | A |
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20040061420 A1 | Apr 2004 | US |